The electric vehicle revival reflects negotiations between public policy, which promotes clean, fuel-efficient vehicles, and the auto industry, which promotes high-performance vehicles. Electric cars were once as numerous as internal combustion engine cars before all but vanishing from American roads around World War I. Now, we are in the midst of an electric vehicle revival, and the goal for a sustainable car seems to be within reach. In Age of Auto Electric, Matthew N. Eisler shows that the halting development of the electric car in the intervening decades was a consequence of tensions between environmental, energy, and economic policy imperatives that informed a protracted reappraisal of the automobile system. These factors drove the electric vehicle revival, argues Eisler, hastening automaking's transformation into a science-based industry in the process. Challenging the common assumption that the electric vehicle revival is due to the development of better batteries, Age of Auto Electric instead focuses on changing environmental and socioeconomic conditions, energy and environmental policies, systems of energy conversion and industrial production, and innovation practices that affected the prevalence and popularity of electric vehicles in recent decades. Eisler describes a world in transition from legacy to alternative energy-conversion systems and the promises, compromises, new problems, and unintended consequences that enterprise has entailed.
Author(s): Matthew N. Eisler
Edition: 1
Publisher: The MIT Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 379
Tags: Electric Automobiles: Technological innovations; Electric Automobiles: Political Aspects; Electric Automobiles: Public Opinion; Sustainable Engineering: Social Aspects
Cover
Half title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
1 | Introduction
2 | Reconsidering The Automobile
3 | Defining Appropriate Technology
4 | Forcing The Future
5 | Hydrid Politics
6 | Bounding Battery Risk
7 | Fuel Cells, Hydrogen, And Environmental Politics
8 | Kyoto Cars
9 | Art Of The Possible
10 | Computers On Wheels
11 | Motor City Twilight
12 | Electric Cars And The Business Of Public Policy
13 | Silicon Valley Takes Charge
14 | The Life Electric
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index